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To: battousai
My guess is these dolts don't realize that the gator wasn't returned to the wild because having lost its fear/shyness of humans it was much more likely to threaten people and return to urban areas. And sleazeball channel 2 isn't about to educate anyone to that fact. Channel 2 is about the worst example of journalistic theater, the kind that gleefully would throw gasoline on a fire at an orphanage to get better witness 'reactions'.
13 posted on 04/29/2003 11:40:37 AM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
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To: Diddle E. Squat
Here in Georgia, Game officers will call in professional trappers to capture nuisance gators. The trappers get to keep the gator for later sale to boot and meat companies, in order to pay for his services.

The skin and meat from a good sized gator will bring several hundred dollars.

18 posted on 04/29/2003 11:47:20 AM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: Diddle E. Squat
http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/news/42803_local_gatorcaught.html

Katy residents outraged at treatment of alligator

By Chris Adams ABC Eyewitness News

(4/28/03) — Some residents of a Cinco Ranch neighborhood are angry and shocked at what they call inhumane treatment of an alligator.

People who live in the Shadow Bend subdivision found a nine-foot alligator in the street. They say they really didn't have a problem with the gator. They just wanted it gone. What they did have a problem with is how the animal was treated by folks with the Parks and Wildlife Department.

It happened last Thursday morning when residents in the subdivision on on Lodgestone at Cannondale woke up to find an alligator in the middle of their street.

"They live on the golf course out here. We see them in the pond back there, so he was only like a house away from his territory," said resident Laura Brumbauth. "He was just laying in the street and everyone was getting their cameras and watching him."

The nine foot gator sat there quietly for hours. Eventually, the Fort Bend Sheriff's Department arrived and then came a game warden from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. At first, the crowd thought the game warden was relocating the gator.

"I think the consensus of the group was that he was here to save the animal," said resident Georgia Daley. "The animal was also, I think, in danger because it was in the middle of the street. It could be run over. It wasn't in its habitat. It just needed to move."

Instead, the game warden tied the alligator to his truck.

"He tied the alligator up and started dragging him down the street and that's when everyone started screaming because he was dragging him too fast and he was flipping and turning and it looked pretty cruel," said Brumbauth.

"When I see that animal laying there, even on the video, it enrages me to think that someone could be so cruel," said Daley.

The game warden then took the gator to the end of the street and fatally shot it.

"If a child was in danger, if a pet was in danger, by all means dispose of the animal. I won't go that far," said Daley. "But if that animal can be saved, then save it."

We spoke with Tom Harvey of the Parks and Wildlife Department. He said alligators that are less than five feet in length they do try to relocate. However in this case, he said, "Safety is our main concern. This nine foot gator would not have been safe to capture and relocate." He also says alligators that have become comfortable around human being are more dangerous.


19 posted on 04/29/2003 11:48:14 AM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
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